Companies honored for innovative ideas at 2010 Utah Innovation Awards

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Companies honored for innovative ideas at 2010 Utah Innovation Awards

By Jasen Lee , Deseret News

Published: Friday, April 30 2010 12:00 a.m. MDT

SALT LAKE CITY — Innovation can come in many forms. Sometimes it's a product that can help doctors diagnose speech impediments. Sometimes it's a product that dispenses windshield washer fluid.

Be it a cool new idea or product or developments in existing technologies, competitors at the 2010 Utah Innovation Awards event Thursday often prompted the question, "Why didn't I think of that?"

Consider the Smile Reminder Patient Communication Software Suite, winner of the Innovation Award in the Enterprise Business to Business Software category.

"It's a service that's designed to help dental and medical practices communicate better with their patients," Bruce McKay, vice president of sales for Lehi-based Smile Reminder, told the Deseret News. "Using e-mail and text messaging, we tie directly into their scheduling software to automatically generate things like appointment reminders an hour before your appointment."

That imaginative thinking, coupled with practical use and function for a large-scale industry, is just the kind of ingenuity the awards are meant to recognize.

The awards were presented at the Marriott City Center at an event co-sponsored by the Utah Technology Council. The awards program acknowledges inventiveness in eight technology-related categories.

"Utah is an incredibly innovative state with innovative people who are very creative, outside-of-the-box thinkers who are looking for ways to advance industry and business," said Nicole Kershaw, business development manager for event co-sponsor Stoel Rives.

She said the eight winners were chosen from 120 nominations, the most in the eight-year history of the program.

"Our selection committee is made up of experts in the various categories, so they set the criteria that best reflect the merits of each of the nominees so that it's a fair evaluation," Kershaw said. "They look at things such as novelty, competition, creativity and whether it's generating revenue for a company and contributing to our economy."

Among the other award winners was a gadget aimed at one of the most popular hobbies in Utah and around the country: scrapbooking. Utah County-based Provo Craft and Novelty Inc. took the prize for computer software/electrical devices for its Gypsy for Cricut. According to the company's vice president of product development, Jim Colby, the device allows people to use the Gypsy — a kind of Etch-a-Sketch/iPad — to make all their designs, which can be saved and then linked to the Cricut, which produces the original stencils or artistic designs.

In the near future, the next-generation device will likely have Wi-Fi capability, he said.

"We're tending to look more at 'do-it-yourselfers,' people who want to create and make things," Colby said.

And that, of course, would be the very definition of innovation.

This year's winners

Biotechnology/pharmaceuticals: Computational Molecular Phenotyping by MetaboView Inc.

Clean technology and energy: Subsurface Metabolic Enhancement by Pure Enviro Management

Computer hardware/electrical devices: Gypsy by Cricut by Provo Craft and Novelty Inc.

Consumer software and Internet: 4Store by Control4

Enterprise software and Web-enabled business-to-business solutions: Smile Reminder Patient Communication Software Suite by Smile Reminder

Mechanical systems/chemicals/manufacturing: Nanostrands by Conductive Composites

Medical devices: DualCap by Catheter Connections Inc.

Outdoor and consumer products: Micro-Pump Powered Fluid Delivery by Microlin LLC

e-mail: jlee@desnews.com